Mar 12, 2017

Idiomatic F# Design

HERE are the basic points of idiomatic (according to me) F# design. The idioms I present below are not the ones generally used in the F# community; they are fairly controversial. But they are similar to idioms used in the wider ML languages, and I genuinely believe they offer value in terms of easy-to-read code.

Prefer modules, records, and functions

Try to avoid classes, because they are somewhat higher-ceremony than plain F# records. For example: records can be destructured effortlessly and updated immutably by replacing the values of named fields with new values.

Avoid member methods and properties

They don't mesh well with the functional style because they can't be passed around directly. Module member values and functions can.

Put everything inside modules

Ideally, dedicate a module to a (primary) type and name the type just t to avoid repetition; refer to the type (and other module members) prefixed by the module name for maximum clarity.

In fact, put everything (types, exceptions, and values) inside modules; they are an excellent organisational tool and clarify your thinking about what things go together.

Design top-down using interface (.fsi) files

F# is fantastic for top-down design because you can write the signatures of your modules, data, and operations separately as syntactically valid code in .fsi (F# interface) files and then fill in the blanks later with the actual implementation (.fs) files. Even if you don't consider yourself a top-down thinker, give it a try and you may be surprised by F#'s expressive power here.

Interface files are like C/C++ header files, and let you hide any module members you don't want to expose. Crucially, they also let you hide data definitions and give your caller abstract types to work with, enabling information hiding and decoupling. Quick example:

(* person.fsi *)
namespace MyProject

module Person =
  type t

  val make : string -> t
  val id : t -> int64
  val name : t -> string
  val with_name : string -> t -> t

(* person.fs *)
namespace MyProject

module Person =
  type t = { id : int64; name : string }

  let make name = { id = Id_service.get (); name = name }
  let id { id = i } = i
  let name { name = n } = n
  let with_name new_name t = { t with name = new_name }

In the above example, we hide the Person.t type's implementation details so that callers can't create values of the type themselves bypassing our API. Nor can they operate on values of the type in any way except the ones we provide as part of the Person module.

Also, we take advantage of the above-mentioned F# destructuring pattern matching and immutable record update--benefits we don't get from OOP style--to quickly access and change exactly the parts of the data we're interested in.

Use classic ML-style type parameter application

The recommended style of type parameter application in .NET is with angle brackets after the type constructor. But this is noisy, and just gets noisier as your types get more complex. Use ML-style, which reverses the order of application to postfix, but gets rid of (most of) the noise. Let's compare:

type a1 = Async<option<Person.t>>
type a2 = Person.t option Async

type b1 = Choice<string, Person.t>
type b2 = (string, Person.t) Choice

type c1<'a> = Map<string, 'a>
type 'a c2 = (string, 'a) Map

ML-style type application gives you the biggest wins for sequences of single-parameter applications, but it still spaces out the code in general, which helps with reading.

Use type parameters to control allowed operations

When your type has operations that are only valid when the type is in a certain state, then you can express it as a discriminated union (a sum type) so that operations work in different ways for different cases of the DU. But the problem with exposing the cases of a DU is that you lose decoupling--you can't easily control future refactoring of the type because user code will depend on existing DU cases.

Another problem is, maybe certain operations don't work for all states of a type. Let's try an example:

namespace MyProject

module Bulb =
  type t = On | Off

  exception Already_on
  exception Already_off

  let turn_on = function
    | Off -> On
    | On -> raise Already_on

  let turn_off = function
    | On -> Off
    | Off -> raise Already_off

Both of our critical operations on the Bulb.t type are raising exceptions if called wrongly. Sure, we could have returned a None : Bulb.t option instead if something went wrong; but that just passes the checking to the caller somewhere else. There is a better way: phantom types. Here's the above example converted:

(* bulb.fsi *)
namespace MyProject

module Bulb =
  type on
  type off
  type 'a t

  val on : on t
  val off : off t
  val turn_on : off t -> on t
  val turn_off : on t -> off t

(* bulb.fs *)
namespace MyProject

module Bulb =
  type on = interface end
  type off = interface end

  (* Phantom type--left-hand type parameter isn't used on right hand. *)
  type 'a t = On | Off

  let on = On
  let off = Off

  (*
  Compile warnings are OK here because we're controlling allowed inputs.
  *)
  let turn_on Off = On
  let turn_off On = Off

Note that the compiler warns us here about incomplete pattern matches on the Bulb.t type, but we ignore them in this case because we're explicitly controlling allowable function inputs at the type level. We can turn off this warning with a #nowarn "25" compiler directive in the bulb.fs file, but in general turning off warnings is not a good idea.

Prefer records of functions to interfaces

Here is a good write-up about this, but let me reiterate: interface methods can't be easily passed around, unlike record member functions (which can be closures, remember). An example:

(* api.fs *)
namespace MyProject

module Api =
  exception Invalid_id

  type 'a t =
    { get_exn : int64 -> 'a Async
      add : 'a -> unit Async
      remove_exn : int64 -> unit Async
      list : unit -> 'a seq Async }

(* person.fs *)
namespace MyProject

module Person =
  type t = { id : int64; name : string }

  let make id name = { id = id; name = name }
  let id { id = i } = i
  let name { name = n } = n

  (* val api : t Api.t *)
  let api =
    { get_exn = fun id -> ...
      add = fun person -> ...
      remove_exn = fun id -> ...
      list = fun () -> ... }

Above we implement a generic data store API and a domain type that implements the API. Note that as a convention we add an _exn suffix to code which might raise an exception. This helps the reader prepare to reason about exception handling.

Wrap OOP-style APIs in modular F#

When dealing with traditional OOP-style APIs, e.g. Windows Forms, try to wrap them up in modular F# and expose only the F# abstraction. E.g., suppose you're writing a simple GUI calculator app in WinForms. You need to (1) write out the logic and make it testable; and (2) render the GUI in a form. Solution--put these things in a module:

(* calculator.fsi *)
namespace CalculatorApp

module Calculator =
  type number = Zero | One | Two | ... | Nine
  type op = Plus | Minus | ... | Sqrt

  type t

  val init : t

  (*
  We will implement these operations as mutating to allow a more fluent,
  pipeline-based API like:

  let result =
    calc
      |> clear
      |> press_number Five
      |> press_op Plus
      |> press_number Six
      |> calculate

  At this point, `calc` is in the state that it holds a calculation
  result. We can `clear` it to do more calculations.
  *)

  val clear : t -> t
  val press_number : number -> t -> t
  val press_op : op -> t -> t
  val press_decimal : t -> t
  val calculate : t -> double

  (*
  Draws the app and hooks up event handlers to the above operations.
  *)
  val render : t -> System.Windows.Forms.Control

Now in the implementation, follow the types to implement the business logic and the GUI. Note how the logic is testable because the main operations are exposed, but the messy OOP GUI rendering is not--the caller just gets back a Control to embed in their main window. This is composable and readable.

General philosophy

To conclude, we aim for these design points:

  • Information hiding with interface files
  • Simpler, less noisy syntax is better
  • Modular is better--ideally everything is in a module
  • Logic encoded in the types is better--you get compile-time guarantees and have to do less runtime error handling.

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